Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 5, 1938, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO DfLY TAR HEEL THURSDAY, MAY 5, 193 )t Batty Kwc Jleel The official newspaper of the Carolina Publications Union of the University f North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where it is printed daily except Mondays, and the Thanksgiving, Christmas and Spring Holidays. v.-nfoToA an second class matter at the post office at Chapel HilL N. C, under act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price, ?3.00 for the college year. . " " Business and editorial offices: 204-207 Graham Memorial Telephones: news, 4351; editorial, 8641; business, 4356; night 6906 Allen MerrilL Will G. Arey- William McLean- Jesse Lewis ..Managing rdltor .Business" Vanaof XirculatinT Manager Editorial Board ' Voit Gilmore, Frank Hoieman, Bob Perkins, -DeWitt Barnett, Tom Stanback, David Stick. Feature Board Jesse Reese, David J. Jacobson, Sanford Stela, Misi Virginia Giddens, Adrian Spies, Miss Edith Gutterman. Technical Staff News Editors: Gordon Burns, Morris Rosenberg, Laffitte Howard. s Associate News Editors: Donald Bishop, Carroll McGaughey, Jim McAden. Night Sports Editors: William Beerman, Raymond Lowery, Charles Barrett. Senior Reporters Bill Snider, Miss Lucy Jane Hunter, Miss Gladys Best Tripp, Lawrence Ferling, Buck Gunter. Heelers Ed Rankin, Fred Cazel, Martin Harmon, Noel Woodhouse, Gene Wil liams, Ben Roebuck, Bob Barber, Bob Berbert, Britt Beasley, Ed Hoffman. . Sports Staff . Editor: Shelley Rolfe. Reporters: Jerry Stoff, Martin Kalkstein, Richard Morris, William L. Beerman, Leonard Lobred. Business Staff Advertising Managers: Bobby Davis, Clen Humphrey. Durham Representative: Dick Eastman. Local Advertising Assistants: Stuart Ficklen, Bert Halperin, Bill Ogburn, Andrew Gennett, Ned Hamilton, Billy Gilliam. Office: Gilly Nicholson, Aubrey McPhail, Louis Barba, Bob Lerner, Al Buck, Jim Schleifer, James Garland, Archie Lindsay. For This Issue NEWS: MORRIS ROSENBERG SPORTS: ' RAYMOND LOWERY o The Primrose Path Patterson and the junior-senior dance committee rallied behind the German club yesterday in turning "thumbs down" on corsages for dances. However, the committee will expect men participating in the figure to send their dates corsages. At first the German club group considered leading the way by completely prohibiting beflowered dates on their dance floors. Can the mere recommendation of the dance committees or any committee break down, on short notice, a custom four years old? 0 Troubled Waters Calmer With a compromise State College's Faculty council "re versed" itself Tuesday. The students will have their final commencement dance this year, but in the future the com mencement season will close with the twilight graduation exercises. The reversal was called "an expression of faith and con fidence in the State College student body." However the acuity condemned the demonstration of a week ago, from which it might appear their change of heart resulted. Nor was the question of wider powers for the Student government made an issue. Only the future can tell whether State men will be satisfied with one "expression of faith" from their faculty, or press the stronger student government issue. They can stop now. One thing at a time might be enough to ask their faculty council, and it is quite likely that the administration will not tolerate another demonstration. But, though the students may not find an opportunity to press their point in the near future, it is unlikely they will forget the possibilities of a stronger student government. Bunk House Blues The University and its campus has become a State mecca. This week come delegates to the International Rlations Conference, athletes to the Monogram Club. In recent weeks have come hosts of play makers, high school debaters, jour nalists and tennis players. Thousands of "pilgrims" trek into Chapel Hill during the year. The problem of housing them graciously and comfort ably is yet unsolved. The University offers these visitors accomodations in the antediluvian "Best House" or in the Bynum basement. Townspeople, fraternities, and dormitories have been call ed upon frequently. Obviously, they cannot always help. When they do, it is with difficulty and inconvenience. Bynum gymnasium offers a solution. If it were remodeled into a campus guest house, the University would be able to meet a pressing problem. D. B. o $500 On The Altar Mother Hubbard went to the cupboard and found it bare. That would have been the condition in the women's lounge of the new gymnasium if the Carolina Co-eds had not given $500 to furnish the room. By spending its money in this manner the. association sac rificed a possible affiliation with the American Association of University Women long desired by coeds here. A well-furnished lounge will certainly serve the interest of the campus as a whole, with the large number of feminine guests annually visiting the University. Their comfort and their impression of the University and its facilities are es sential to our prestige. The $500 carved from the co-ed budget was an endowment to the University. W.K. HORIZONTAL 1 Common y " -reptile, - " Pict4d here nis fi2 One in cards. "13 Common laborer. 15 Roof -edge. 16 Heron. 18 A dandy. 20 Profound. 22 Narrative poem. 23 To sti-aighten-up. 25 Stir. 26 Bone. 28 Thin inner. sole. 30 Tone 6. ," 31 To bow. ' 34 Beneficial. 36 Merry. 37 Broad brimmed hat. 40 Form of "be.1 41 Beer. 42 Heraldic fur. 43 Spring fasting Common Reptile Answer to Previous Puzzle. (EtfUHSOiriMtAtNi IQ'PI QIS D H4MO EIC iSEErjosEF m YIElTnAHJHWiN SIET PIlMDEjS SjREt5 ODlALnCOMEITn eh. UmeTr I s MtIe (a NCI INjE ARI eTs! ICtANEI TlR PIT L, r ill A U VIE -TED uLfns BARE pTE A season. 45 Stream. 46 Exclamation. (48 Ponders. , i-53 Chaos. 54 Drone bee. 56 Sandy tract by the sea. 57 Portico. 59 Grain. 61 Mud. 63 Destruction. 65 It belongs to the genus 66 It its prey whole. ' VERTICAL 2 To scold. ,3 Land measure, 1 4 To retain. 5 Spain. 6 FxJd of string. 50 Half . 14 And. 16 It has an : body. 17 Musical note. 19 Parts broken off. 21 A few varieties ol , this reptile.; are . 24 Door handle. 27 To fly. 29 Hamlet. 32 One who dyes. 33 Book of Psalms.' 35Xlk. 38 Olive shrub. 39 Shower. 44 Prefix signifying four "47 Finger ring. " 49Verbal termination. Lib My. Day. OR On A Raft By Charley Gilmore i 7 ToJeduce. iSToexist.. '9 Boy. 10 Herb containing ipecac. 11 Ovules. 51 Cetacean. 52 Spirit. . .-1 55 Hurrah! 58 To be sick: . 60 Note in scale. 62 Electric unit; 64. Nay. Bill McCachren has tossed a bouquet to the boys in Manly. He says they are representative of all the campus. That's not a very nice thing to say, is it?- A straw poll down there re vealed that residents were 100 per cent against giving corsages to dates. Next they'll be voting on whether or not to have dates. There's no no telling where this thing might 4 stop. yl 5""lJj" ' I j 21 W 25 TT 27" " 1 -237 : 29T" 30" . , . W 43 149 150 151 "5Z 55" fi 1 1 I I 1 il 11 11 h CAMPUS NOMAD o 0 By 0 Voit Gilmore The shotgun wedding on the steps of Peabody hall Tuesday night cleared up mysterious al lusions to marriage problems printed at random in the Tar Heel over the weekend. . George Moore, master publi cist, also revealed that the an nouncement of a movie scout's visit to Swain Hall at supper time was a to "phoney" draw crowds to the playlet by Grail initiates over at Peabody. Theme of the playlet, "Crime Not Pay Much," was a Dorms Elect New Officers Family Affair The May Frolics committee discourages the sending of cor sages. They say it's in the in terest "of the parents. That cer tainly is looking for the answer right at home. The Interf raternity council and the Junior-Senior Dance committee have mulled over the problem, too. In fact, everybody has come to a decision about it except the Undergraduate Philo sophy club. Joe Patterson says, however, that those participating in the figure will be expected to send corsages. Those boys get all the breaks, don't they? Except when they're stuck for flower money. My Brother All this started when my bro ther, Voit Gilmore, wrote a col umn about it. He advised against corsages because Pete Ivey wasn't sending one. Sort of a Tayloe Honored By Med Men (Continued from first page) by a hundred alumni and faculty mem bers of the School. Dr. MacNid showed pictures and plans of the new medical building, competitive bids for which were scheduled to open today. Plans for the new building reveal a structure having a ground and fcrar other floors. The Division of Public Health and the Medical School wflL occupy the building jointly. Ehringhaus Named Alumni Head v (Continued from, first page) cles. Dr. McKnight is a former mem ber of the faculty here and is now a surgeon. Mr. Boushall's class was 1915 and Dr. McKnight was graduated in 1914. Mr. Ehringhaus, who entered into a legal partnership in Raleigh for prac tice after he stepped out of the gov ernorship, holds three University de grees, lie won his A. a. m 1901 and recently was made secretary of that class. He took his law degree in 1903, and the University conferred upon him the honorary degree of Ll.D. in 1934. A son is a member of the Senior class here and another was graduated in law last year. Aycock To Be Held For Frosh (Continued from first paje) more extensive scale. Others As Usual Other dormitories will be reserved as usual: Carr for law students. Smith for graduates-, and second floor of Grimes for Medical students. Present Aycock residents have been notified to secure rooms elsewhere for next year. (Continued from first page) nrosnect of a second vote. Officers of Lewis chosen unanimously Monday flower-the-leader movement. night are Bill Hill, president, and Bill Some of the boys don't want Hoyle, vice president. Monday night these officers will meet with the present membership of the Interdormitory council to elect other officers, Tom Fry, president, an nounced yesterday. The vice presi dent, secretary, and treasurer will be chosen. to send a dozen roses because they prefer Four Roses better. That's one bouquet they don't need a straw vote on. I understand some of the boys in Fraternity Court have a solu tion all their own. They're go ing to chip in and buy one big corsage, sort of a community af fair. Reminds me of a song: "Everybody's Posie." On The Air By Walter Kleeman Does forced marriage between Puddin Wales, involuntary groom, and Bill Blalock, mater-in-waiting, because of Jim Davis, unnamed child of misfortune. As the risque production pro ceeded before 200 or so mem bers of the mixed audience, Grail men held their breath more and more. The seven non-fraternity and six fraternity Grail initiates took advantage of their comic situation to make raw crack af ter raw crack. That did not re quire much changing from the original script, which was writ ten, unwisely, by a non-Grail student. At the conclusion of the little skit, many spectators and sev eral conscientious Grail men were wondering. Had the ini tiates' playlet been very repre sentative of ideals of the Grail, an honorary organization to bet ter campus relations? Definitely not. For the one time in a school year that the Grail had publicized its own ac tivities, it wasn't smart to pick an illegitimate child as an ex cuse. Next year the Holy Order will have to make amends with a case of honorable wedlock. (Ed. note More careful sleuthing elicits the fact that John Scott Trot ter, heard on the Kraft Music Hall tonight, is the fourth Carolina band; leader to be found currently at the top of the amusement world.) 6:00, Try it and get a few laughs: Easy Aces from KDKA; also the An drews Sisters at the usual stand on WBT ... 6:15, Sophisticated singing, Vocal Varieties, WLW . . . 6:30, Find out how the other half lives; listen to We, the People, on WHAS . . . 7:00, Variety and good music from Rudy Vallee over WLW; sorry that Kate Smith is on WBT and the March of I Time on KDKA at same time . . . 8:00, We think you'll like Robert Tay lor, Judy Garland, and Meredith Wil son's Orchestra on WPTF, but Major Bowes shows you new talent over j WDNC . . . 9:00, Proud Pappy of Barbara Ann Burns, Bing Crosby, Walter Huston, Alec Templeton, and our man Trotter's Orchestra over ' WPTF; and Essays in Music offers assorted classics on WDNC . . . 9:30, Hear Americans at Work oh WDNC . . . 10:15, WBT presents George Mc- Call's screenscoops ; Duke Ellington vibrates on WDNC ... 11:00, To sleep with Orrin Tucker's Orchestra from WBT. BIRTHDAYS TODAY (Please call by the ticket office of the Carolina theater for a com plimentary pass.) Ray Douglas Asch Gould Means Beech James Everette Bryan Beverly Page Burroge Clark Rodman Frank Marion Hblmes Tom Henderson Humphries Kenneth Julian Lasser Herbert David Langsam J. Gilmer McCarne George Branch Patrick Anne Darrall Patterson Bertram Monroe Winkler Richard Alongo Wells. . . . and how it grew and grew! In 1891 this writing desk type telephone was installed in a Long Island general store. It was a good telephone, but it could be connected with only a part of the Bell System's 250,000 telephones in the country at that time. Service was slow and expensive. Year by year this strange looking telephone, with a more modern transmitter and receiver substituted from time to time, grew in useful ness as the Bell System grew longer in reach shorter in time needed for making connections higher in quality of service lower in cosU In 1937 wold faithful" was retired to be come a museum exhibit, but 15 mil lion modern Bell telephones "carry on." mill 1 J!ITTP ..
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 5, 1938, edition 1
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